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College & Workforce Readiness

States Promise Higher Standards for NCLB Leniency

By Catherine Gewertz 鈥 December 14, 2011 8 min read
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In hopes of getting relief from key tenets of the No Child Left Behind Act, 11 states are proposing large-scale efforts to train their educators in new academic standards, create or oversee development of new instructional resources, and redesign their testing systems.

The proposals represent plans from the first round of applicants in the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 waiver program, which allows states to escape requirements such as bringing all students to proficiency on state tests by 2014.

In exchange, however, states must establish new accountability systems that win federal approval, and the first-round batch of applications shows a wide range of such plans. More states are expected to apply for waivers by the second-round deadline of Feb. 21. (鈥淣CLB Waiver Plans Offer Hodgepodge of Grading Systems,鈥 Dec. 7, 2011.)

States seeking waivers must also show that they have rigorous academic standards, a solid plan to transform standards into good instruction, and tests that ensure students are ready for college or good jobs.

They can meet the standards requirement by adopting the Common Core State Standards, which all but four states have done. They can meet the testing requirements by belonging to a multistate consortium that is designing common tests for those standards. All but five states are participating in those projects.

Alternatively, states can demonstrate high standards by having their higher education systems certify that students who master them can skip remedial college courses. They can meet the testing requirement by presenting a plan to design high-quality assessments, or by submitting their current tests to the federal Education Department for peer review.

Minnesota is the only one of the applicants that did not adopt the common standards in both mathematics and English/language arts and is not participating in designing common assessments. It adopted only the English/language arts standards. Minnesota鈥檚 higher education system has certified that mastery of its math standards will allow students to enroll in credit-bearing coursework, the state says in its application. It also says it will submit its assessments in both subjects for peer review.

Every other state applying for a waiver cites its adoption of the common standards and its participation in common-assessment design as evidence that it is meeting the Education Department鈥檚 鈥渃ollege- and career-ready鈥 requirements for standards and tests.

Implementation Plans

States sought to show that they are analyzing what it takes to put the new standards into action and deploy solid gauges of student learning. Some implementation plans are far more detailed than others; New Mexico鈥檚 description runs three pages. Minnesota鈥檚 is 37.

College/Career-Ready Standards

To receive waivers from key tenets of the No Child Left Behind Act, states must demonstrate they have adopted 鈥渃ollege- and career-ready standards,鈥 and have developed solid plans to implement them. They must also show that they have, or are devising, high-quality assessments to measure student achievement and growth. Highlights of what states are describing and proposing include:

STANDARDS

Colorado: Adopted the common standards. Developing a 鈥渞egional, content-specific鈥 approach to blending standards, instruction, and assessment. 鈥淐ontent collaboratives鈥 facilitated by the state education department will engage teachers in creating and disseminating standards-based formative assessments and instructional materials.

New Jersey: Adopted the common standards. Developing an optional model K-12 curriculum based on the new standards, with end-of-unit assessments, model lessons, and formative tasks. A statewide coalition of curriculum experts, and experts in new regional centers, will help districts transition to new standards.

Tennessee: Adopted the common standards. Conducting 鈥渃rosswalk鈥 work to compare previous standards with new ones and crafting content for professional development. Has held sessions for more than 4,000 principals and supervisors on the new standards, and has begun classroom-implementation training for K-2 teachers.

ASSESSMENTS

Massachusetts: Participating in designing common-assessments planned for 2014-15. To transition to those tests, the state plans to phase into its current state test items based on the new standards starting in 2011-12. By 2013-14, all math and English/language arts items will reflect the new standards. The state is also developing additional, curriculum-embedded performance-based test items in English/language arts, math, science, and history/social science.

Florida: Participating in common-assessment design. In partnership with its state colleges and universities, Florida designed a new college-readiness exam for 11th graders that allows those who reach a given cutoff score to skip remedial work in college.

Colorado: Participating in common-assessment design. It plans no changes to its current tests. Instead, the state is 鈥減ursuing multiple avenues,鈥 including soliciting bids for its own new state tests and using a new, transitional exam until that test is finalized.

SOURCES: U.S. Department of Education; State Applications

In response to questions from the Education Department, states described their work to compare the new standards with their previous sets and disseminate information about the new requirements through conferences, meetings, and workshops, both face-to-face and online.

Tennessee reports a plan for 鈥渕ultiyear鈥 professional development, focusing particularly on the math standards and the new requirements for literacy skills across disciplines. Florida and New Mexico say they will turn first to training teachers of younger students and move upward through the grades over the next couple of years.

Georgia used the state鈥檚 public-television system to conduct a common-standards orientation this fall, aiming to reach not only school staff members, but also parents and community leaders, it says in its application. It is also developing a more targeted series of learning sessions for administrators, teachers, and instructional leaders, by subject and grade level. The English/language arts sessions will address the new standards鈥 demands that students read increasingly complex text and develop literacy skills specific to subjects such as science and social studies.

Georgia decided to conduct all training face-to-face or through streamed video with curriculum specialists because it has found a 鈥渢rain-the-trainer鈥 model ineffective, it says in its application.

Massachusetts reported that it held conferences, professional-development sessions, and regional events for early education, K-12, and higher education to disseminate the new standards, and featured them at its annual curriculum and instruction summit.

While states are working to reach educators, the applications show signs that teachers were often the last to be reached. Indiana, for instance, includes charts detailing the training being provided for curriculum directors, instructional coaches, and administrators at the district and building levels. But it doesn鈥檛 provide much detail on its plans for teachers.

Kathleen Porter-Magee, who oversees standards work at the Washington-based Thomas B. Fordham Institute, reviewed the states鈥 waiver applications and is concerned about their professional-development plans. They seem too focused on identifying gaps between states鈥 previous standards and the new ones, she said.

鈥淭his is actually an opportunity to step back and say, 鈥榃here have we gotten standards-based instruction and assessment and achievement wrong, and what broad changes can we make?鈥 鈥 said Ms. Porter-Magee, a former charter-school-network curriculum director.

鈥淎re we helping teachers think through how long-term lesson planning will be different? Are we actually showing them what close reading of grade-appropriate text looks like? I see a piecemeal approach that assumes that most of what states are already doing is OK, with a few tweaks to specifics.鈥

Crafting Curricula

Many states report efforts to craft鈥攐r help districts craft鈥攃urriculum and instructional materials. Massachusetts devised instructional modules on key aspects of the standards, such as the 鈥渕athematical practices,鈥 which emphasize conceptual understanding, and plans to have at least 100 model instructional units available by 2014, it said.

It has begun training 300 teachers in designing curriculum units and performance assessments, and it plans sessions for teachers of students with disabilities and those learning English, the application says. Massachusetts also reported collaborating with professional-development providers to align materials to the common standards.

And the state reported that it plans to revise its curriculum frameworks for science/technology, engineering, history/social science, arts, health, and foreign language to incorporate the cross-disciplinary literacy skills from the new standards. It developed new prekindergarten standards in math and literacy. And it mailed 170,000 copies of its revised K-12 math and literacy curriculum frameworks to districts 鈥渟o individual teachers would have hard copies of the frameworks to use for their independent classroom alignment work.鈥

Kentucky is working to build an online resource that will house the standards, along with exemplar lessons, instructional materials, and video podcasts by higher education faculty on teaching common-standards content. Georgia state specialists are producing teacher guides, instructional units, and sample tasks to post on the state education department鈥檚 website.

Testing Systems

Since the common assessments won鈥檛 be fully operational until 2014-15, states were asked to describe how they will alter their current testing systems to reflect the expectations of more-rigorous standards. Some reported plans to embed in their own tests pilot items from the two assessment consortia, or items that emulate the kind of questions or tasks likely to appear on those tests.

Tennessee said that it is working with the Princeton, N.J.-based ETS and Pearson to revise some items in its state tests. Oklahoma will begin piloting 鈥淧ARCC-like items"鈥攁 reference to the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers consortium it belongs to鈥攚ithin its state assessment in 2011-12, and will circulate them among educators to help them with lesson planning and formative assessment. Indiana will pilot the interim use of the 厂础罢鈥檚 and 础颁罢鈥檚 college-readiness benchmarks while it works with its current test vendor to develop items that reflect the common standards鈥 expectations, it says.

Some states plan to raise test-cutoff scores or use outside exam scores such as those from the SAT or ACT as proxies for college- or career-readiness. Florida reported that it is working this year to raise the 鈥渃ut score鈥 and type of questions on its state test and Algebra 1 end-of-course exam. Like other states that reported similar work, Florida says it anticipates student pass rates dropping as a result.

鈥楿nbroken Chain鈥

Driven by the 2009 passage of sweeping school reform legislation, Kentucky reported that it has been implementing a new assessment system aligned to the college-readiness benchmarks of the ACT college-entrance exam, which all juniors in Kentucky take yearly. The presidents of the state鈥檚 colleges and universities agreed to allow students meeting those benchmarks to move directly into credit-bearing work, the state鈥檚 waiver application says.

Scores from the 础颁罢鈥檚 EXPLORE and PLAN tests, given to all Kentucky 8th and 10th graders, respectively, will serve as early indicators of students鈥 progress toward the ACT benchmarks. Scores on the 础颁罢鈥檚 Quality Core end-of-course tests in four subjects required for high school graduation can be used for students鈥 final grades. The system, it says, provides for the first time an 鈥渦nbroken chain of links 鈥渂etween high school and college expectations.

Common-standards advocates argue that the standards reflect college and career readiness because they were created with input from higher education and business. The ACT and SAT have derived their readiness benchmarks from correlations with good performance in college coursework. But some caution against such equations, at least for now.

鈥淒efining college readiness is such a big question that states are relying on the common standards and tests to answer it for them,鈥 said Jack Jennings, the president of the Washington-based Center on Education Policy, which has followed the NCLB law and common-standards implementation. 鈥淏ut I鈥檓 skeptical that we know what any of these things mean until we see how these students make it through college.鈥

He added that even with that dose of skepticism, he believes the new standards and forthcoming assessments are moving students 鈥渋n the right direction,鈥 and that experimenting with them as proxies for college and career readiness will provide important information.

A version of this article appeared in the December 15, 2011 edition of 澳门跑狗论坛 as States Promise Higher Standards In Exchange for NCLB Leniency

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